
Innovation: capturing the elusive gold-dust
In a certain sense, innovation is at the heart of every project.
In a certain sense, innovation is at the heart of every project.
It’s making projects betterLeon Hughes, project manager, Taylor Wimpey Juggling family and work is a challenge at the best of times, but COVID-19 has forced us to come together and focus on how we can all support each other.
The Great Escape Programmes, projects and plans abound in one of the all-time war classics.
In this series, project managers tell us how they’re using their skills for a personal project.
Who would have thought at the start of 2020 that Christian Dior would be pumping out hand sanitiser and Chanel medical masks and gowns? That the Royal Mint would be making medical visors or that car manufacturers would be making ventilators? The skill and speed with which organisations and their project managers have adapted and pivoted under extreme pressure has been impressive, from government departments like HMRC and NHSX, with its work on a contact tracing app, to online retailers such as Ocado.
Over the past six months we’ve lived a lifetime of change.
When life is challenging, resilience becomes even more important to our wellbeing as it can help us stay safe, productive and effective.
My relationship with stakeholders, internal and external, is often troublesome.
✶ ✶ ✶ In 2016, when a 100ft-wide hole appeared in a five-lane motorway in the Japanese city of Fukuoka, it was resolved through a rapid, concerted effort and the road reopened within a week.
Meet Emily Outten, a project manager at DHL Supply Chain, whose spectacular efforts to bring a drinks distribution centre into the new decade is cause for celebration No one likes being told how to do their job.